美国旅游详细计划英文版
A. 用英语介绍美国全部旅游景点的英语和意思
红色巨岩 艾尔斯岩石 Ayers Rock 世界海洋遗产 大堡礁 Great Barrier Reef 维多利亚大洋路 Great Ocean Road 坎贝尔港 Port Campbell 波浪岩 Wave Rock 昆士兰热带雨林 Rainforest 蓝山国家公园 Blue Mountain 悉尼歌剧院 Opera House 菲利普岛 Phillip Island 悉尼水族馆 Sydney Aquarium 节日想去旅游的朋友不妨试试去西安zhongguo国际旅行社
B. 美国朋友来洛阳旅游 制定旅游计划 英语作文
母亲患痴呆症失记忆我赶家看安详坐藤椅依蔼、慈祥却知我哪知我干甚至知我谁专再谈往属事再谈我童着我笑笑我泪流满面
作者母亲患痴呆症安详躺藤椅着我笑母亲笑顽皮像孩我却哭母亲失记忆读段我丝忧伤我仿佛听已经失记忆母亲清脆笑声
微风吹乱母亲满白发同故乡空飘满愁絮……
微风吹乱母亲满白发句看作者母亲已经龄已经般我看空都美作者却说同故乡空飘满愁絮衬托作者悲伤情
坐面前母亲忘却给我份故乡空忘记母亲双勤劳手我打民间文宝库给我送月夜浓郁诗情让明月星光陪伴我童用智慧才华启迪我想象
母亲忘记曾给作者份母亲忘记作者却没忘记母亲让茁壮能忘记
苦涩童夏夜却美妙暑热散星星齐月亮升起柔月色立即洒满我篱笆院孩眼美辰母亲忙完计洗完澡换件白布褂院干草堆旁搂着我唱起听歌谣:
我像看星星碧洗空调皮眨着眼轮明月缓缓升起照亮着院作者躺母亲怀搂着作者唱起作者听童谣
月亮亮堂堂打楼门洗衣裳洗白白晒
C. 英语作文假期带父母去美国旅游,时间安排,旅游景点,注意事项
假期应该是暑假吧;推荐7-8月游玩;美东(6天左右)就推荐纽约、费城、华盛顿、波士顿,大专瀑布、帝国大厦、自由女属神、华尔街、大都会博物馆、白宫、林肯纪念堂等;美西+黄石(10天左右)洛杉矶、旧金山、拉斯维加斯、盐湖城、环球影城、圣塔莫尼卡、金门大桥、九曲花街、叮当车、渔人码头、秀表演、夜游、科罗拉多、大峡谷、拱门、羚羊彩穴、大盐湖、大提顿、黄石公园(入住里面小木屋);注意事项:峡谷和黄石等区域温度低很多,里面排汗,中间保暖备用,外面冲锋衣;应急药物(常规生病治理,感冒发烧,蚊虫叮咬和日常用药,如高血压、血糖等 );通讯器材要开通国际漫游或买当地电话卡、不破坏文物、保持卫生;食物最好吃熟食;多查看天气和温度等。
D. 英语作文(60词)谈谈你的旅游计划。1今年夏天准备去美国,那里有我父亲的朋友。2我们打算在纽约待两
we are going to American in the summer holiday, because my father's friend is out there. we are going to visit him, he is very good person, we gona spend two week in New York, going around and of crouse we will going to the beach, hope is not too hot out there. Then we will come back after two weeks.
E. 请教各位一份美国旅游行程表,英文版的
不知道你是想去美东还是美西啊,跟团还是自驾游呢,一份行程表也要你这边提共很多资料哦,可以找达美-旅行代办,还提供多条美国特色旅游线路。
F. 我计划跟我的家人去美国旅游英文翻译
1.How many days are your family going to travel to the United States?
2.our family plan to travel to the United States of 12 days
3.In the most appropriate trip to that city is what time?
4.When is the most suitable for travel in the city in April.
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亲,
G. 求一段介绍美国旅游的英文文字
我会
H. 急求有关travel in american(英文)的PPT,主要教我们怎么样在美国旅游
帮你查了好久都找不到这个ppt,不过如果你需要看美国旅游的资料,你可以到滴答美国旅游论坛那去看啊。好详细的。
I. 急求一篇关于去美国旅游的英语作文
The Culture of the United States is a Western culture, and has been developing since long before the United States became a country. Today the United States is a diverse and multi-cultural nation.
The types of food served at home vary greatly and depend upon the region of the country and the family's own cultural heritage. Recent immigrants tend to eat food similar to that of their country of origin, and Americanized versions of these cultural foods, such as American Chinese cuisine or Italian-American cuisine often eventually appear. German cuisine also had a profound impact on American cuisine, especially the mid-western cuisine, with potatoes and meat being the most iconic ingredients in both cuisines.[3] Dishes such as the hamburger, pot roast, baked ham and hot dogs are examples of American dishes derived from German cuisine
The primary, although not official, language of the United States is American English. According to the 2000 U.S. Census, more than 97% of Americans can speak English well, and for 81% it is the only language spoken at home. Nearly 30 million native speakers of Spanish also reside in the US. There are more than 300 languages besides English which can claim native speakers in the United States— of which are spoken by the indigenous peoples (about 150 living languages) and others which were imported by immigrants. American Sign Language, used mainly by the deaf, is also native to the country. Hawaiian is also a language native to the United States, as it is indigenous nowhere else except in the state of Hawaii. Spanish is the second most common language in the United States, and is one of the official languages, and the most widely spoken, in the U.S. Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
There are four major regional dialects in the United States: northeastern, south, inland north, and midwestern. The Midwestern accent (considered the "standard accent" in the United States, and analogous in some respects to the received pronunciation elsewhere in the English-speaking world) extends from what were once the "Middle Colonies" across the Midwest to the Pacific states.
J. 用英语介绍美国旅游景点
国立美国历史博物馆英文介绍
North side of the Mall, 14th St NW and Constitution Ave; closest Metro Smithsonian.
If you like kitsch, you won't want to miss the bizarre melange of cultural artefacts at the National Museum of American History. George Washington's wooden teeth, Muhammad Ali's boxing gloves, and the ruby slippers Judy Garland wore in the Wizard of Oz are set among didactic displays tracing the country's development. It's not so much a center for scholarly study as a sanctuary for vanishing Americana, incorporating Model T Fords, old post offices and even a restored, turn-of-the-century ice-cream parlor, which still serves up banana splits.
As you enter from the Mall, directly on to the second floor, a sound-and-light display showcases the battered red, white and blue flag that inspired the US national anthem - the Star-Spangled Banner itself, which survived the British bombing of Baltimore harbor ring the War of 1812. The worthier exhibits are also on this floor: an account of the rural farm-based society of the early US stands across from an examination of the mass movement of African-Americans from Southern farms to the wartime instries of northern cities. A lunch counter from Woolworths in Greensboro, North Carolina, evokes the sit-in of 1960, while "American Encounters" focuses on New Mexico, looking at how tourism has affected communities such as the pueblo of Santa Clara and Hispanic Chimayo. On the first floor, the "Information Age" gallery traces communications from Morse's first telegraph to Apple Macintoshes, while separate galleries display in glorious profusion the artefacts and machines that have shaped modern America - from lightbulbs and motorbikes to trains and atomic clocks. The top floor holds political memorabilia (much of it over a century old), stamp and coin collections, old TV sets and typewriters, though two final outstanding exhibits inject a serious tone - "Personal Legacy: the Healing of a Nation" brings together some of the 25,000 items left by relatives at the Vietnam Memorial in DC, while "A More Perfect Union" deals candidly with the shameful internment of Japanese-American citizens ring World War II.